Netanyahu might have to turn US policy on its head

T. Belman. In addition to these two challenges, this government is committed to seizing Area C for Israel  which includes massive building there and destroying illegal Arab construction.

Although Bibi has a veto on some of Smotrich’s plans, he won’t be able to restrain him entirely. It remains to be seen to what extent Bibi restrains himself or Smotrich for that matter.

In order to stop Iran, and on the way make peace with Saudi Arabia, Netanyahu may have to wait out President Biden’s administration.

By  Ariel Kahana, ISRAEL HAYOM

Amid the brouhaha of the past several days as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu put the final touches on his government, he also set his sights on two major personal foreign policy goals. The first is his life’s mission – to stop the Iranian nuclear project. The second – to strike a peace accord with Saudi Arabia and thus put a practical end to the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Realizing those two objectives may not seem to be such a hard feat at first glance, precisely because they are intertwined: Saudi Arabia detests Iran just as much as Israel does.

The enemy of my enemy is my friend, the old adage says. In other words, having given tacit agreement to the Abraham Accords between Israel and four Arab states and opened its airspace for Israeli overflights, and let dual Israeli citizens enter the kingdom (along with subtle cooperation on other matters), Riyadh has every reason to move closer to Jerusalem.

But the obstacles that have stalled this have nothing to do with reasons and everything to do with circumstances. The peace deal with Bahrain and the UAE was finalized during the Trump administration, under what was perceived to be a powerful American umbrella. Today, at least in the eyes of regional power brokers, the US presence in the region pales in comparison.

The Saudi regime feels it cannot trust the US. Just recently, China’s President Xi Jinping was treated like royalty when he visited the kingdom and announced a host of collaboration projects between the countries. Such a reception was in stark contrast to the cold shoulder President Joe Biden got when he visited there in the summer. The Saudis are justifiably of the view that Washington should have ratcheted up the pressure to the maximum on Iran. That was the right thing to do before the Hijab protest broke out and prior to Iran entering the Ukraine theater by helping Russia with drones; it is doubly true now – from a moral standpoint but also for political and security reasons.

The US has continued to treat Iran with kid gloves. Although it has been lending a hand, it has not been fully behind the protest movement in Iran. It has also shied away from creating a direct threat to Iran’s nuclear program.

Had Saudi Arabia and Israel been given a US umbrella against Iran, they would have found it easier to work together. Lacking such protection, both countries will have to resort to under-the-radar coordination that will most likely stay under wraps. In other words, in order to stop Iran, and on the way make peace with Saudi Arabia, Netanyahu will have to turn US Mideast policy on its head. It’s hard to believe he will manage to do this so long as there is a Democratic president.

This brings us to the immediate challenges facing Netanyahu and his right-wing government. With progressive circles in the US voicing criticism, the main task Netanyahu, Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer, and Foreign Minister Eli Cohen will have to pursue, along with Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, will be to wage a battle to stop the erosion in Israel’s legitimacy.

Countering those who want to undermine Israel’s standing in the world is something every government has to deal with. The resolution passed by the UN General Assembly on Friday in which it referred Israel’s “ongoing occupation” to the International Court of Justice – a measure that even the previous government under Yair Lapid and Defense Minister Benny Gantz could not stop – clearly demonstrates this battle.

The new government will have to fight this battle all the while pursuing judicial reforms and interacting with the Democratic administration that rejects most of its policies. This is not going to be easy. The vote

Netanyahu will now have to shape Israel’s policy toward Russia as well. On the one hand, he has enjoyed a long personal rapport with President Vladimir Putin. On the other hand, this same Putin is the most hated persona in the west and in the US. Here too, Netanyahu will have to strike a delicate balance.

But having said all that, the biggest external challenge facing the government is actually domestic in origin. The diplomatic pressure works through the media, which is over-represented by the Left and from there to the foreign media, which is consumed by critical Jews in the Diaspora, who then wield influence over the already-displeased administration.

This is the onslaught the government will have to learn to deal with until January 2025 at the earliest, at which point a new president might take the oath of office.

January 2, 2023 | 7 Comments »

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7 Comments / 7 Comments

  1. @Peloni

    The number of misunderstanding of vaccines in general seem to me, and I am not a scientist in this discipline, to be quite considerable.

    Especially on the issue of the charge that these vaccines were not adequately tested.

    This is very watchable

    Dr Wilson “Defunk the Funk”

    Deals with Malone on Joe Rogan show

    https://youtu.be/xjszVOfG_wo

  2. @Felix

    Vaccines have nearly always been mandated as far as I know.

    You are quite wrong in your assumption here. The shingles vaccine and flu vaccine are but a pair of examples which challenge your belief, and they are easily not the extent of it. Furthermore, the vaccines which are mandated, with the exception of the Covid injection, are not mandated under an EUA, ie they are not experimental vaccines. The non-Covid vaccines have been tested in both preclinical and clinical settings across the length of a period of 5yrs at minimum, and more often longer than this. The non-Covid mandated vaccines also have no safety signals screaming to be investigated as does the Covid shots. There are a great many factors, actually, which separate the Covid shots from the non-Covid mandated vaccines, and not the least of these factors is the fact that the Covid injections are actually gene therapy treatments, which require a greater standard of testing than do simple vaccines. The Covid injections are experimental injections with not even successful animal trials to support their use. There is no knowledge of long term safety issues with the Covid injections and only limited knowledge of the short term efficacy and that limited knowledge is fraught with a variety of safety signals demanding these shots be pulled and those who refused to do so to be prosecuted for malfeasance. In addition to all of this is the complication of the fact that the one study which was conducted prior to the Covid shots being forced upon the public was completely fraught with fraud, complete with rigged results and hidden safety casualties(see Brooke Jackson Whistleblower report, and Maddie de Garay’s story as well as the Pfizer clinical data which they tried to hide til we were all long dead).

  3. Dreuveni

    It is more than that

    Surely Israel should seek for the defeat of Fascists everywhere but especially in Ukraine

  4. Leanmarc

    Vaccines have nearly always been mandated as far as I know. It’s in the nature of the exercise.

  5. Bibi should retain good relationships with Putin and anyone else who shows a reciprocal behavior. His relationship with Biden should be at the other end of a barge pole.

  6. It is no secret that Iran has come very close to achieving its goal of producing nuclear weapons, unimpeded by the feckless Biden administration. I believe Netanyahu can achieve all his foreign policy goals if he can convince Biden to support a joint bombing campaign to obliterate Iran’s nuclear infrastructure and/or support a joint covert effort to aid Iranian protestors to overthrow the present Islamist regime and replace it with a legitimate democratic government.
    This would make it much easier to convince Saudi Arabia to join the Abraham Accords.
    Again, the key is to convince Biden and his advisors that if they continue with their present soft-glove treatment of Iran, within a short time Iran will have nuclear weapons and will brutally put down the simmering insurrection against the Islamist regime.

  7. At least there are billions of dollars of ugly 5G towers across area C.
    Someone it seems is heavily investing there.
    Just so adolescent gamers can gave more fun, right?
    The whole situation is a farce and a distraction. Why do writers Glick, Greenfield, Blum, Phillips all from JNS say Efes about global tyranny, vaxx mandates, etc
    Not a peep in 2.5 years.
    There is an elephant in this ‘room’ that no-one sees or talks about.